Combinatorial Investigation of Structural and Optical Properties of Cation-Disordered ZnGeN<sub>2</sub>
ORAL
Abstract
In this work, we present a combinatorial study of sputtered ZnGeN2 thin films with cross-cutting applications in fundamental materials science and novel device development. The II-IV-N2 materials offer the possibility of groundbreaking optoelectronic properties through greater chemical and structural tunability than the III-Ns. ZnGeN2 is lattice-matched to GaN and is predicted to exhibit a direct bandgap with strong absorption, but experimental studies to date report inconsistent optical properties. Additionally, minimal work has explored variation with cation composition, which has been shown to impact properties of other II-IV-N2 materials. Here, we present a study of combinatorial ZnGeN2 grown by RF co-sputtering. X-ray diffraction reveals phase-pure films in the expected cation-disordered wurtzite structure for cation compositions from 30% to 60% Zn/(Zn+Ge) and synthesis temperatures from 200°C to 600°C. Changes in crystallinity are explored as a function of cation composition, synthesis temperature, and in-situ and ex-situ annealing. Finally, spectroscopic ellipsometry is performed to investigate optical properties with changing synthesis conditions. This study re-affirms the potential for tunability of thin film ZnGeN2 as a direct- and wide- bandgap optoelectronic material.
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Presenters
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Celeste Melamed
- NREL/Colorado School of Mines
- Colorado School of Mines
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory